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Shoah |Facts & History |
Partisans & Resistance |
LeChambon
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The "Righteous Gentiles"
 Raoul Wallenberg |
Raoul Wallenberg, a scandinavian diplomat, is creditedwith saving thousands of Hungarian Jewish lives by remarkable efforts,
even putting his own life on the line. Knowing that he could be killed,
and leaving messages to the effect, he bartered for the lives of thousands
who were herded into a small area for massacre. After the war, he was
taken prisoner by the Soviets, and was never heard from again. He is
thought to have been interred in a Soviet Prison Camp, and there have
been reports of his existence over the years. The street in Washington D.C.
which is home to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum is named for him. |
 Oskar Schindler/& Stern
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Schindler, the director of Brinlitz, did not start out to be a rescuer. He was a Nazi entrepeneur, with a less than moral personal life. But, in the words of one of the persons he rescued, "he was an imperfect man who did a very perfect thing". Early in the war, through a Jewish man named Stern, Schindler began making "business" deals with Jewish businessmen and investors, offering to protect their investments although for little in return. Later at Brinlitz, a purported munitions factory, he bought slave labor in an effort to save lives from the camps. The mostly Jewish slaves were purchased at what amounts to @$1200 dollars a piece. They were treated better at Brinlitz than almost anywhere under Nazi control, and via Stern, he often saved the young, the lame and the weak that no one else would 'purchase'. At the end of the war, he had to flee as did much of the Third Reich hierarchy, but not before saving over 1200 lives, who would have met their fate in the gas chambers of Auschwitz and Treblinka as well as others. Schindler died penniless and divorced, but was declared a righteous gentile by Yad Vashem in Israel. |
 The Ten Boom Family
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In the books, The Hiding Place, Tramp for the Lord, & My Father's House
is expounded the Dutch drama of the Ten Boom Family, a didicated Christian Family who as
part of the Dutch Underground Resistance movement hid Jewish person/families in a counterfeit
room in their house, at risk of their lives. Eventually betrayed by a police informant, the
two sisters in their 50's were first imprisoned, then taken to the work camp of Westerbork,
and then
into Germany against hope to Ravensbruck where the older sister passed away from typhus and malnutrition.
The younger sister Corrie learned additionally that her elderly father had died shortly after being
taken into police custody. Corrie Ten Boom was released one week before all the women her age were killed.
Almost all of their hidden charges escaped. After the War, true to the older sister's vision, Corrie
managed a displace person's camp, loving survivors back to a peacetime existence. She wen on to become a Christian Evangelist,
teaching that there is no place so dark that the Love and Grace of God cannot reach. She died an invalid
in California in the 1980's, of a stroke after spending all but the last 5 years of her life writing and teaching thelove of God and
sharing her experiences in the Shoah.
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 The People of Le Chambon'
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In a small French town in the hills, at a small Hugenot Church, it was announce that they had received an
arrival of "Old Testaments" Keeping the encroaching Nazis at bay, this meant that Jewish children had arrived in Le Chambon, who were taken into homes for safekeeping both by deported parents and parents awaiting their fates.Some adults were also give refuge. It is estimated that over 5000 were saved.
They, unlike some other religious organizations, allowed the Jews to worship freely.
Both the Mayor and Minister as well as the townspeople were bold in standing up against the Nazis. When asked if they would hide Jews in their community, by visiting officials of the Third Reich, they responded they would even if it meant death. They, like the Ten Boom Family believed it the duty of the Christian and the Command of God to protect and save the Jewish people: a special trust. The
Church and many of the same people still exist today, as do many of the Jewish Children of Le Chambon. |
 Mies Giep
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Mies Giep and and her husband are not well known by name but are quite well
known as the couple that hid the family of Anne Frank during the Shoah. Giep and her
husband who had been employees of Frank before the war, hid the family in a "counterfeit"
room along with several others, risking their own lives to bring them food and provision while
keeping Nazi inquiry at bay. The Frank family, when word of the Nazi confiscation of property
and deportation came, dressed in layers of clothing so no one would detect a move, and disappeared.
Giep has written recently about the heroic efforts in keeping these families and individuals
alive. Of the Frank family, only the Father remained alive, and the discovery of Anne's diaries
and subsequent publication told the poignant story of a young woman coming of age under Nazi
terror, only to subsequently die in a concentration camp a short time before liberation. |

The Haganah
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The Haganah, formed in 1920 in Israel, was a para-military para-police group of highly trained individuals who worked initially for the protection of immigration to Israel (then called "palestine"), who defended existing Jewish settlements in Israel at the time, and helped 'illegal' immigration when the British government and others attempted to overturn or illegally overwrite the Balfour Decree allowing Jewish immigration to the mid-east and the establishment of the State of Israel as a homeland for the Jews. As the War in Europe progressed, the Haganah helped european Jews escape the terror of the Third Reich. Many Haganah members at the end of and after the war were women who led small groups to Israel against British opposition. Interestingly, the founder of the Haganah, Charles Orde Wingate was a Christian with Zionist views. He held to the role and importance of the Jews in endtime prophecy. See Jewish Virtual Library |

The Danish Sea Rescue |
Danish sailors, in small craft rescued many many Jewish refugees from the Reich's persecution. Jewish passengers, sometimes with papers and sometimes hidden as precious cargo were ferried to scandinavian countries where the hand of the Reich did not reach as heavily. The Danish sailors risked confiscation of their ships and boats as well as their lives in this heroic effort. Over 8000 Jews and family members were helped in their escape from Nazi tyranny. The of the few left in Denmark, many were sent to Terezin. Many Danish survivors were alive at the end of the war due to their government's intervention and the benevolence of the Danish people. See USHMM: Rescuers & Denmark |
 The attempt of the St. Louis : |
"The signal to Hitler was that nobody cares about the Jews," said Col. Phil Freund, U.S. Army Reserve, retired. He turned 8 aboard the ship as it languished
in Havana Harbor in May 1939.6In 1939, the MS St. Louis, set sail with 930 Jewish passengers and 7 non-Jewish passengers, for Cuba where the refugee/'tourists' hoped
to disembark and find political asylum from the Nazi Regime. Arriving in Havana Bay, immediate difficulties were encountered. One Cuban official sought
to establish a fee for deboarding, and an additional fee was established to determine 'tourist' status. The process was fraught with corruption,
and few passengers had the required fees for either. Most passengers had spent life savings and raised money in an attempt to leave Germany, and were
required in addition to passage to pay a 'guarantee' on a return voyage in the event the voyage failed. One man, Pozner who had been released from Dachau
had to leave behind family and friends, having raised only the money for his own mandated departure. Only 22 passengers were able to deboard in Cuba,
and neither the United States nor any other nation agreed to take refugees from the ill fated ship. One of the reasons for the ban on asylum was that the
World War began in 1939, and the Jews, hated by Germany, and disavowed of citizenship, were still seen by other nations as German Jewish citizens,
and were subject to bans on 'enemy aliens'. Despair was rampant and two passengers attempted
suicide, knowing the end that awaited them in Europe. For a short while, there was hope that the Jews might be allowed to deboard on a local island,
but this too was denied. Pozner, the passenger mentioned above, rallied a failed mutiny of the bridge, but in the end, the ship was turned back to
whatever port in Europe would take the refugees, amidst suicide watches and hopelessness. A recent study, published in the book, Refuge Denied: The St. Louis Passengers and the Holocaust
By Sarah A. Ogilvie and Scott Miller, sought to trace out the fate of the passengers of the St. Louis. While many thought for years that
most had been killed, (many had), Ogilvie and Miller were able to determine that a number survived, including a number who were arrested by the gestapo
and interred in camps initially upon the return. A recent conference in 2009 sponsored by Sen. Kohl of Wisconsin hosted a reunion of 33 of the estimated 66
whom survived till now. Belgium, France, England and Holland reportedly accepted passengers in the return, although many were immediately arrested and interred
in 'work' camps (lagers) or one of the Killing Centers (Concentration Camps) or at least under Nazi control. The authors
of the recent study claim 254 deaths in the camps, although others have reported higher figures, and only approximately 66 still survive.
1http://njjewishnews.com/njjn.com/010109/cjMuseumDirectorSees.html
2MS St. Louis http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Holocaust/stlouis.html
3http://www.ushmm.org/museum/exhibit/online/stlouis/
4 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MS_St._Louis
5http://www.miamiherald.com/news/florida/AP/story/1381037.html
6 Ogilvie, S.A. and Miller, S. Refuge Denied: The St. Louis Passengers and the Holocaust
7 |
 Oswego: |
Upstate Oswego New York is not where most think to look for Holocaust related events. The US during WWII had severe restrictions on immigration especially Jewish immigration. German Jews for example had to get paperwork from local Nazi-controlled police stations in order to immigrate to the US, making this a virtual impossibility beyond the severe quotas. A small concession though was made in Oswego, where a displaced persons camp was set up and several hundred Jewish men women and children were interred. They were not allowed to leave the camp though, although the children attended American public schools. Our efforts were too little, too late.
See "Safe Haven", Oswego, NY |
OTHER RESCUE EFFORTS
by Elizabeth Kirkley-Best,PhD © 2000 all rights reserved
Footnotes
Photo Credits: Corrie Ten Boom: Trans World Radio
Le Chambon: USHMM/www.autre.net/seeds: 365 Stories for our Lives.
Mies Giep & Helpers: WWW.AnneFrank.com
Danish Sea Rescue : Archives of USHMM:http://www.ushmm.org/outreach/
Schindler: Filmakers.com
orignal design by Brendan Best (c)2000
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